Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 17th Aug 2009 22:26 UTC
Legal The legal bickering between Apple and Psystar is almost getting uglier and grittier by the day. In a filing made last week, the Cupertino giant accused Psystar of destroying evidence, but today the clone maker has vigorously denied ever having done such a thing.
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Comment by kaiwai
by kaiwai on Mon 17th Aug 2009 22:32 UTC
kaiwai
Member since:
2005-07-06

It was a shady organisation from the very day it opened.

I want to see Mac OS X on generic PC's but there is a right way and a wrong way to go about it.

The ironic part is the amount of money spent on this - I guess people see a better future in trying to fight legal battles with Apple than spending money to improve Linux.

Reply Score: 3

RE: Comment by kaiwai
by reflect on Mon 17th Aug 2009 22:38 UTC in reply to "Comment by kaiwai"
reflect Member since:
2007-07-10

I don't quite share your sentiment, and would thus like to hear how you came up to them being shady. By "them", I assume you mean psystar?

Since a lot in the filing was censored, and it's hard to make out what's what, what makes you think they're shady?

Reply Score: 4

RE: Comment by kaiwai
by tupp on Mon 17th Aug 2009 22:40 UTC in reply to "Comment by kaiwai"
tupp Member since:
2006-11-12

It was a shady organisation from the very day it opened.

Yes. With their early phreaking and taking credit for inventing the GUI, how can one ever trust Apple.

Reply Score: 7

RE: Comment by kaiwai
by Laurence on Mon 17th Aug 2009 22:47 UTC in reply to "Comment by kaiwai"
Laurence Member since:
2007-03-26


I want to see Mac OS X on generic PC's but there is a right way and a wrong way to go about it.


...and that is exactly what this court case is here to find out.

Personally, I'm more interested in hearing the courts verdict than your own as you've made it perfectly clear in the past that your biases lye with Apple.

Reply Score: 3

RE[2]: Comment by kaiwai
by kaiwai on Tue 18th Aug 2009 00:14 UTC in reply to "RE: Comment by kaiwai"
kaiwai Member since:
2005-07-06

...and that is exactly what this court case is here to find out.


Why not challenge it before starting a business?

Personally, I'm more interested in hearing the courts verdict than your own as you've made it perfectly clear in the past that your biases lye with Apple.


Provide evidence of my bias. I have stated that I would like to see generic PC's loaded with Mac OS X, I've talked about the fact that I would have bought a Thinkpad if Mac OS X could be loaded onto it and supported by Apple.

Then again, you seem to have a habit of running peoples name through the mud with little evidence to back up your accusations.

Edited 2009-08-18 00:15 UTC

Reply Score: 1

RE[3]: Comment by kaiwai
by Laurence on Tue 18th Aug 2009 06:26 UTC in reply to "RE[2]: Comment by kaiwai"
Laurence Member since:
2007-03-26


Why not challenge it before starting a business?

Probably because they needed the financial backing of a business to have even the remotest chance against a company as affluent as Apple.

Probably because in their eyes, they weren't actually breaking any law to start with (and to be honest, I'm inclined to agree with them)

Probably because there isn't sufficient proof of loss to take Apple to court over the EULA thus the only way to argue their case was by creating a business model.


Provide evidence of my bias. I have stated that I would like to see generic PC's loaded with Mac OS X, I've talked about the fact that I would have bought a Thinkpad if Mac OS X could be loaded onto it and supported by Apple.

You've also always been one of the 1st to defend apple whenever they've been challenged - regardless of what apple did prior.

You've also always been one of the 1st to comment on how "poor" other OSs are compared to OS X.

Maybe I've taken your comments out of context, if I have then I appolagise. But the majorety of your posts that I've read have sounded like PR releases for Apple.


Then again, you seem to have a habit of running peoples name through the mud with little evidence to back up your accusations.

You're the only person I've ever made a comment about that could be interpreted as a direct personal attack!

I appretate I was probably a touch blunt with my previous comment (in hindsight I was), but please lets not turn this into a "bitch slap" contest.

Reply Score: 4

RE[4]: Comment by kaiwai
by kaiwai on Tue 18th Aug 2009 08:01 UTC in reply to "RE[3]: Comment by kaiwai"
kaiwai Member since:
2005-07-06

Probably because they needed the financial backing of a business to have even the remotest chance against a company as affluent as Apple.

Probably because in their eyes, they weren't actually breaking any law to start with (and to be honest, I'm inclined to agree with them)

Probably because there isn't sufficient proof of loss to take Apple to court over the EULA thus the only way to argue their case was by creating a business model.


Why not consult with some lawyers? why not find out whether the Apple EULA could be challenged before spending money setting up the venture? companies spend money all the time on making sure their products don't violate patents, conform to regulatory requirements and so forth - this would be yet another one of those cases.

Now, things might have been different if a group of lawyers had said, "yes, we've looked through the EULA and there is no legal framework to back up such a restriction - I'd suggest you challenge it". I know if I was an investor, before injecting funds into an organisation, I'd want to make sure that my money wasn't going to fall into a bottomless pit.

You've also always been one of the 1st to defend apple whenever they've been challenged - regardless of what apple did prior.


Where? I've come out against the rediculous App Store policy, I have talked about how Apple should move to a more software and gadgets based business model, I have also said that Apple's lack of oversight regarding third party suppliers in regards to the suicide of a Foxconn employee is unacceptable.

Is it the fact that I don't scream hatred Apple is some how interpreted by you as blind fanboy zealotry?

You've also always been one of the 1st to comment on how "poor" other OSs are compared to OS X.


I compare it to Mac OS X because that is what I have the most experience with. I'm not going to compare something I have never used in a sizeable way before.

Maybe I've taken your comments out of context, if I have then I appolagise. But the majorety of your posts that I've read have sounded like PR releases for Apple.


And within that apology you attack me again. You really can't help yourself.

Edited 2009-08-18 08:05 UTC

Reply Score: 2

RE[5]: Comment by kaiwai
by Laurence on Tue 18th Aug 2009 09:56 UTC in reply to "RE[4]: Comment by kaiwai"
Laurence Member since:
2007-03-26

Why not consult with some lawyers? why not find out whether the Apple EULA could be challenged before spending money setting up the venture? companies spend money all the time on making sure their products don't violate patents, conform to regulatory requirements and so forth - this would be yet another one of those cases.

Now, things might have been different if a group of lawyers had said, "yes, we've looked through the EULA and there is no legal framework to back up such a restriction - I'd suggest you challenge it". I know if I was an investor, before injecting funds into an organisation, I'd want to make sure that my money wasn't going to fall into a bottomless pit.

You're assuming that didn't happen.

Besides, I can't speek for the US specifically, but EULAs have already lost simular such court cases in the European countries.


And within that apology you attack me again. You really can't help yourself.

That wasn't an attack - I was just explaining why I posted what I posted before.
I appreciate how the cold, sterile words of an internet forum often get read in an unnecessarily negative tone (I've been guilty of this on a number of occasions), but believe me when I say that I have bigger priorities than engaging in personal attacks on an IT news site.

Reply Score: 3

RE: Comment by kaiwai - Linux improvements
by jabbotts on Tue 18th Aug 2009 00:13 UTC in reply to "Comment by kaiwai"
jabbotts Member since:
2007-09-06

I'd like to see Creative spend some money on getting a working XFI driver into the kernel or alsa projects.. I don't think they are spending money on Apple or Psystar either though.

(F'ing creative.. grr.. first board from them I've had issues setting up.. almost disapointing enough to make me return it and accept substandard audio for my gaming)

Not to be totally off topic though, osX is sexy so indaviduals spending money to get it is not odd. Psystar and Apple are also not directly related to Linux based platforms so I can't see either of them spending money on the underdog platform either. Psystar specifically is more a retail outfit that is getting some great press through the osX litigation even if the finaly outcome does not end up being in there favor. Maybe they'll get barred from selling osX without being bankrupt in the process and will then turn to more liberty oriented platforms.

Invalidation of EULA or eventual focus on free platforms; luckily, either one benefits the end user ultimately.

Reply Score: 2

kaiwai Member since:
2005-07-06

I'd like to see Creative spend some money on getting a working XFI driver into the kernel or alsa projects.. I don't think they are spending money on Apple or Psystar either though.

(F'ing creative.. grr.. first board from them I've had issues setting up.. almost disapointing enough to make me return it and accept substandard audio for my gaming)

Not to be totally off topic though, osX is sexy so indaviduals spending money to get it is not odd. Psystar and Apple are also not directly related to Linux based platforms so I can't see either of them spending money on the underdog platform either. Psystar specifically is more a retail outfit that is getting some great press through the osX litigation even if the finaly outcome does not end up being in there favor. Maybe they'll get barred from selling osX without being bankrupt in the process and will then turn to more liberty oriented platforms.

Invalidation of EULA or eventual focus on free platforms; luckily, either one benefits the end user ultimately.


The point I was getting at is the fact that Pystar is more willing to spend money on defending their business selling computers pre-loaded with Mac (they knew before starting the business that this was going to happen - common sense would tell you that) than allocating those funds to create a business orientated around a Linux desktop distribution on specifically chosen and supported hardware.

I never said anything about Apple investing in Linux - I pointed the irony of Pystar company spending money on lawyers instead of spending on creating an easy to use Linux distribution, selectively chosen and supported hardware, which would have avoided the fiasco in the first place.

If it is any consolation; the systems they sell are of such poor quality, they're not even useful as a Windows machine either. If you want to try Mac on a non-Apple computer you're better off either selecting the components or purchasing a machine from Dell or Lenovo that comes with some support once the Mac OS X experiment fails.

Reply Score: 2

tyrione Member since:
2005-11-21

There margins are most attractive hacking OS X.

Reply Score: 2

Laurence Member since:
2007-03-26


The point I was getting at is the fact that Pystar is more willing to spend money on defending their business selling computers pre-loaded with Mac (they knew before starting the business that this was going to happen - common sense would tell you that) than allocating those funds to create a business orientated around a Linux desktop distribution on specifically chosen and supported hardware.


I think the real point is why should Psystar be bullied out of building a business model around OS X when there's no legal precedence stating that they can't?

Reply Score: 3

kaiwai Member since:
2005-07-06

I think the real point is why should Psystar be bullied out of building a business model around OS X when there's no legal precedence stating that they can't?


Incorrect, around 7-8 years ago there were a couple of guys selling PowerPC based motherboards on ebay which could install Mac OS X unmodified. I don't remember the details but there was some legal rangling and the two ceased selling them. That is one precedent.

Even before the move to Intel there were attempts at getting it to work on clones; the precedent set so far has been pretty simple. If you're a small group of people fiddling around with Mac OS X and installing it on a computer in the privacy of your own home, Apple will ignore you. If you try and turn it into a business model - Apple will go after you for it.

There is nothing stopping Pystar from selling an EFI based computer, using EFI based firmware so that everything in it is compatible with an Apple Mac, selling it to the end user with either Windows, Linux or no operating system, then leaving it up to the end user to install Mac OS X when they get home. That would have been the simplist way to get around it.

Reply Score: 2

Laurence Member since:
2007-03-26

Incorrect, around 7-8 years ago there were a couple of guys selling PowerPC based motherboards on ebay which could install Mac OS X unmodified. I don't remember the details but there was some legal rangling and the two ceased selling them. That is one precedent.


Got a link to back up that it was due to a legal ruling they ceased trading and not because Apple bankrupt them with a long drawn out legal battle?

Reply Score: 2

kaiwai Member since:
2005-07-06

Got a link to back up that it was due to a legal ruling they ceased trading and not because Apple bankrupt them with a long drawn out legal battle?


Like I said, I didn't have the details of the case. I have a feeling it was one of those cases where lawyers chatted and they came to an arrangement. All I remember from the situation was the problem was resolved quickly - I'm sure if a lawyer wanted to make a name for himself, he would have done so (given how many lawyers are keen to do grand standing).

Regarding licensing linking hardware and software together like Apple does; many hardware companies do it with their firmware.

Reply Score: 2

Laurence Member since:
2007-03-26

Like I said, I didn't have the details of the case. I have a feeling it was one of those cases where lawyers chatted and they came to an arrangement. All I remember from the situation was the problem was resolved quickly - I'm sure if a lawyer wanted to make a name for himself, he would have done so (given how many lawyers are keen to do grand standing).

So basically it's not a legal precedence then as it wasn't a Judges ruling

[edit - cleared up my point]

Edited 2009-08-18 11:02 UTC

Reply Score: 2

prospectofdeath Member since:
2006-03-20

There is nothing stopping Pystar from selling an EFI based computer, using EFI based firmware so that everything in it is compatible with an Apple Mac, selling it to the end user with either Windows, Linux or no operating system, then leaving it up to the end user to install Mac OS X when they get home. That would have been the simplist way to get around it.


This is the smartest comment I've read about the Pystar case on OSnews. The rest of you need to invest in a spell-checker and cut back on the coffee.

Reply Score: 4

RE: Comment by kaiwai
by TheIdiotThatIsMe on Tue 18th Aug 2009 01:38 UTC in reply to "Comment by kaiwai"
TheIdiotThatIsMe Member since:
2006-06-17

It was a shady organisation from the very day it opened.


Why? I could understand if they stopped selling or supporting their systems after the legal battle started, or if they just disappeared and took off, but neither of those have happened. Pystar has continued to operate, in the open, and have continued to increase their offerings and I believe have continued to support their customers that have purchased from them.

I want to see Mac OS X on generic PC's but there is a right way and a wrong way to go about it.


And what exactly is the "right" way of doing it? Start the legal battle *before* opening business? Apple would bury them so deep in paperwork they'd have toilet paper for the lifetime of every Pystar employee, and Mac OSX would probably be completely irrelevant by the time any outcome was decided. While the course they chose isn't perfect, it did force Apple to move forward in legal proceedings as Pystars systems continue to sell. They have also changed methods so they no longer have to alter the install disc to help reduce the legal grey shades.

The ironic part is the amount of money spent on this - I guess people see a better future in trying to fight legal battles with Apple than spending money to improve Linux.


Someone has to do it, and I think better them than me or you. Also, why would an independent vendor have any interest in investing solely in another company's product, only to enter into a niche market that already has established competitors in it, whom would also benefit from their investment? Pystar holds product lines across all three of the major operating systems, including OSX, Windows, and Linux, which is something (as far as I know) currently unique to them.

Edited 2009-08-18 01:41 UTC

Reply Score: 4

Moredhas
Member since:
2008-04-10

Is there something inherently wrong with Apple's logic? They're asking Psystar to produce what they've destroyed. By this logic, I could be accused of theft, then accused of destroying the evidence, then convicted in the absence of evidence...

Reply Score: 3

Thom_Holwerda Member since:
2005-06-29

IF Psystar indeed destroyed evidence. Apple is just accusing them - nothing more, nothing less.

Reply Score: 2

kaiwai Member since:
2005-07-06

IF Psystar indeed destroyed evidence. Apple is just accusing them - nothing more, nothing less.


True, and the accusing reminds me of Donald Rumsfield with the 'known unknowns' speech.

Reply Score: 2

Comment by sbergman27
by sbergman27 on Tue 18th Aug 2009 03:28 UTC
sbergman27
Member since:
2005-07-24

It's a simple case of Apple's word versus Psystar's word, and because of the censored documents, we can't really confirm anything at this point.

But Apple's word has the reputation for honesty, truth, and credibility which Apple Inc has earned, standing behind it.

Surely that should be worth... something.

Reply Score: 3

I'd Like to see Pystar Win this
by drcoldfoot on Tue 18th Aug 2009 11:20 UTC
drcoldfoot
Member since:
2006-08-25

Not for the reasons many of you believe. I do own Apple Hardware. But I detest Apple's Business model. If Apple has a stance on OSX as a non supported OS on any hardware BUT apple, this would open up more revenue for Apple in the software area, meanwhile opening up support services for third parties. Apple could bill itself as most secure on Apple hardware since they keep tight reigns on it's drivers, etc for it's proprietary HW. Meanwhile OEMS can license to sell OSX on their perspective platforms.
I believe this is why SUN eventually lost to Linux. Apple can learn lessons from SUN in this regard. By sticking to the HW as the chief form of revenue and bastardizing their OS, they lost to Redhat and all the other Linux Distros in Driver support, etc.
This case Does bring negative publicity to Apple since it is the Geek's lovechild. Not even Microsoft has been this rabid about Intellectual Property in WHAT hardware it is to be installed on. Most Apple faithful castigate Microsoft for their IP Antics. But right under their nose and with approval for that matter, the Apple consumer allow their company to curtail innovation by the same people who put Apple where it is now.

Reply Score: 1

Bruno the Arrogant Member since:
2009-03-19

Actually, I wonder why they don't license OS X Server to companies like HP or Lenovo or Dell. Apple doesn't really seem all that interested in the corporate server market, and it certainly isn't one of their core businesses. I can understand maintaining the monopoly on their desktop OS, but why not let the companies that already have their foot in the data center door push their product there? They lose nothing, risk nothing, and they can let other companies open the data center market for their products.

Reply Score: 1

why Psystar couldn't sue first
by TechGeek on Tue 18th Aug 2009 13:56 UTC
TechGeek
Member since:
2006-01-14

Psystar could not have sued Apple first as you suggest Kaiwai. Apple is incapable of breaking its own licenses or EULA's. Its not until Apple actually tries to enforce the EULA that a lawsuit can take place, which is what is happening now. Until Apple objected, Psystar was free to do what ever they wanted, as they are not breaking any criminal laws.

Edited 2009-08-18 13:57 UTC

Reply Score: 2

RE: why Psystar couldn't sue first
by JLF65 on Tue 18th Aug 2009 17:47 UTC in reply to "why Psystar couldn't sue first"
JLF65 Member since:
2005-07-06

Actually, this case isn't over the infamous EULA. It's funny that so many people think it is. This case is over the DMCA - Apple accuses Psystar of "bypassing" a security feature to get OSX running. That's a no-no under the DMCA. That's why Apple wants them to provide all the versions of the code they put on computers - to try to show that Psystar was working around Apple code meant to keep OSX from working on other computers.

Psystar's attempt to bring up the EULA has already been tossed out by the judge. Psystar will need some other way to beat Apple's charges - probably something along the lines of interoperability.

Reply Score: 5